City of Saints’ Jim Osborn Talks Acidity and Blends

December 1, 2016

Meeting up with City of Saints Head Roaster Jim Osborn recently, two trends, due for some consideration, were top of mind: the widespread celebration of, if not obsession with, acidity; and the bit of condescension sometimes directed at coffee blends.

Osborn, sitting in a sunny window at the City of Saints café near Manhattan’s Astor Place, grinned. “You could almost do a parody of a coffee tasting with coffee people, where basically everybody wants to out-acid the way that they describe their favorite coffees,” he said. “It’s like it’s a competition for brightness, acidic complexity and esoteric flavors.”

While there’s more to experiencing a coffee than just what its acidity provides — mouthfeel and sweetness, for example — one could generalize, Osborn concedes, that most of the flavors an individual picks up in a coffee are a result of its acidity.

“It’s like it’s a competition for brightness, acidic complexity and esoteric flavors.”

“But acidity isn’t everything,” he adds. “We don’t always strive for maximum complexity, maximum acidity. By doing that, the coffees become very difficult for baristas to work with and exponentially more difficult for people to make at home.”

He went on to explain that a roaster may cup a coffee and find it “super complex and wild and exciting,” but then in the café, when it’s a barista, and not, say, the meticulous director of education who’s preparing it, it can taste like olive oil.

“Then it’s like, ‘Who am I doing this for?’ It becomes pretty self-serving at that point,” Osborn continues. “And that doesn’t mean that you can’t have both. But you have to be realistic about what is happening with the coffee.”

City of Saints, Astor Place, New York City

Who’s making the coffee and to what end it’s being consumed are meaningful details worth making decisions around, and Osborn is aware of these when he’s designing a roast profile.

“A person who’s throwing on a pot of coffee while running around in the morning, and adding milk or whatever else, is probably better off with a rounder, fuller coffee, rather than something that’s delicate and light and, frankly, probably more expensive,” he explains.

“I feel like so many individuals would hate that sentiment, but I think it’s great, because it lets us explore the sweetness, the body, the muting of an acidity to the point where sweetness is a little more emphasized.”

An example?

“Well, we do that now with the coffee that we’re buying from Genuine Origin. It’s a Honduran coffee, the Reserva Guama Danta. It has really nice acidity. On the cupping table, we discussed its acidity quite a bit. But in casual consumption, whether you’re a casual drinker or someone who works in coffee, what is noteworthy about that coffee is not its acidity but that it’s very sweet. Very milk chocolate-y, with just a nice, round body,” said Osborn.

“The way we roast it, it doesn’t thin out much as it cools down,” he went on about the Guama Danta. “It has enough body to retain its body for a long time. And it does have nice but very mellow — like pear, allspice — acidity to it that I really appreciate. We could be roasting that coffee to accentuate its acidity a lot more, but it’s not what we want to do with it.”

The idea of needing different coffees to play different roles offers a good segue into blending. While some may assume blending is about masking a weak lot, that’s far from always the case — it can serve a number of practical and aesthetic purposes.

“We could be roasting that coffee to accentuate its acidity a lot more, but it’s not what we want to do with it.”

Osborn tells a story about recently cupping the components of City of Saints’ house blend, which is called Citizen, with GO’s Teresa von Fuchs.

“She was like, ‘Oh, two good coffees, blended together, and then you have a good blend. What a novel idea,’” he offered wryly, enjoying that the concept had been appreciated.

But he got more serious, explaining why he creates the house blends that he does—and why some people might take offense to them. One reason for them is practicality, related to the need to offer something consistent, as the seasons change and current coffees are replaced by new ones.

“Maybe for six months of the year, one of the coffees is holding the overall character of the blend. So you have a really juicy coffee that has a really nice, citric acidity that you like, but that you know would be too expensive for most of your customers. And you have a coffee that’s really mellow and sweet and elegant, and that you know isn’t going to detract from the other one at all — and that will allow you to save a little money,” said Osborn.

City of Saints’ Jim Osborn isn’t shy about blending Ethiopias. “It’s exactly the type of coffee that individuals who disagree with my ideology about blending would be really upset that we’re putting in a blend.”

City of Saints has two blends: Citizen and Denizen. Denizen always features one floral, washed African coffee with high acidity and inevitably a high price point.

“It’s exactly the type of coffee that individuals who disagree with my ideology about blending would be really upset that we’re putting in a blend,” Osborn acknowledged.

“But realistically, the fact that that coffee is in that blend is what allows us to brew that coffee and to showcase it. Basically, everybody who comes in here today is going to drink that coffee and taste the flavors coming from that washed Ethiopian coffee. But it’s only one-third of the blend, so we can still charge $2.50 a cup for it and get people that experience without alienating anyone.”

“The fact that that coffee is in that blend is what allows us to brew that coffee and to showcase it.”

Straightaway, Osborn acknowledged that the popular instinct to look down on blends likely comes from a very well-intentioned place, and that roasters are genuinely concerned about paying tribute to the accomplishments of the producers.

“But it’s also a good example of people in coffee misappropriating morals into the way that they sell a product,” said Osborne.

“Blends serve a purpose for most retail environments. If you want to look at your profitability, the averaged-out cost of goods for your coffee, and you want to be able to present something to your wholesale partners or your customers that is going to reflect a consistent character, you really are prudent to do that by blending coffees.” •